Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Quinoa Tacos

This is such an awesome way to eat vegan tacos. There are very few ingredients and it is so tasty! Bon apetit!

Servings: 12+ tacos
Total time: 20 minutes

Ingredients:
1 cup uncooked quinoa, rinsed
2 cups water
15 oz. can diced tomatoes, drained
4 oz. can chili peppers
1/2 tsp. cayenne pepper
1 tsp. cumin
12 small tortillas
vegan cheese (optional)

Bring quinoa and water to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes or per package directions. Add tomatoes, chili peppers, cayenne pepper, and cumin to quinoa. Heat tortillas in your preferred way. Serve with your favorite taco toppings and side dishes.


Monday, January 27, 2014

"But Acupuncture Hurts"


Source: CartoonStock.com

I'm often asked what I do for a living and when I respond that I'm an acupuncture student, I get a lot of reactions about acupuncture being painful. One of the arguments I hear many times over is that acupuncture treats pain by using the distraction method. This method is used to cause pain at a separate area to "distract" the patient from feeling pain at the original site.

This is completely untrue for at least two reasons:
1. Acupuncture doesn't hurt. More appropriately, it shouldn't hurt. Due to this fact, the distraction method already is dis-proven.
2. There is scientific evidence all over the medical community using functional MRIs that prove, not only is acupuncture effective in treating pain, but we are learning exactly how acupuncture is working to treat pain.

If you suffer from pain, see an acupuncturist for a treatment course before turning to pharmaceuticals or surgery.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Vegan Tortilla Soup

This is such a yummy soup! It has a thinner stock than traditional tortilla soup. If you like a thicker base, add two to three tablespoons of flour. You can also blend/puree the bell pepper, onion, tomatoes, garlic, and green chiles to have a thicker stock.

Ingredients:

2 Tbsp olive oil (coconut oil or palm oil)
1 bell pepper, diced
1 brown or sweet onion, diced
2 to 4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped or pressed
3 teaspoons ground cumin
1 (28 oz) can crushed tomatoes
3 (4 oz) cans chopped green chile peppers
4 (14 oz) cans vegetable broth
salt & pepper to taste
1 can whole kernel corn
tortilla chips
1 avocado, peeled, pitted, and diced

Directions:

Heat the oil in a large pot over medium heat. Saute bell pepper and onion for a few minutes until the onion is translucent. Add garlic and saute for 1-2 minutes. Add tomatoes, chile peppers and cumin. Pour in the broth and season with salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes.

Add corn to the soup and cook for an additional 5 minutes.

Serve with tortilla chips and avocado as a garnish on top.


Monday, January 20, 2014

Dry Needling - Acupuncture or not?


Source: CartoonStock.com

"Exactly which school of acupuncture are you from?" This is a good question to ask not only of your acupuncturist, but your doctors, physical therapists, chiropractors, dentists, etc. Anyone that is assisting you with the care of your body should have attended an accredited school within their field. This doesn't mean that they have to have attended Harvard or some other Ivy League college to be good at what they do, but an accredited school is imperative!

There is an unfortunate phenomenon occurring in many US states right now called "dry needling." This is essentially using a thin, filiform needle without a hollow opening for liquids to be pushed through...this is an acupuncture needle. Dry needling is up for debate in several states right now to determine if it will be made legal for practitioners other than acupuncturists to use acupuncture needles to treat patients with pain. Doctors, physical therapists, and chiropractors could be given the opportunity to take a 300-hour (or less) course to use "dry needles" and insert them into painful areas of patient's bodies to give them relief.

There are several issues that strike me in the above scenario. One of the issues is that just putting needles at the painful sites isn't acupuncture. Point location is very specific and putting needles in painful spots isn't always the best way to treat pain, sometimes inserting a needle at the site of pain can cause even more pain than before. An issue that arises from the first issue; if the practitioner had been properly trained, then they would know how to needle properly. This is where the biggest red flag waves: most people would never get surgery from an untrained physical therapist. So why would you get acupuncture from an untrained/under-trained practitioner? Acupuncture, if performed without the proper care and training, can cause minor problems such as bruising to major problems like collapsed lungs, which can be fatal. It is not acupuncture that is to blame for these problems, it is careless or untrained practitioners that cause damage.

Please seek a fully trained, Licensed Acupuncturist (LAc) before getting an acupuncture treatment. Most US states require at least 3,000 hours of training to become licensed, 10+ times as much training as "dry needle" practitioners. You can use www.acufinder.com to search for a acupuncturist near you. Don't hesitate to ask where the practitioner was trained and licensed before making your first appointment.


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

No Mess Pasta

This is a great tasting recipe, and it is so simple and quick. It's a great go-to dish when you don't have much time, but still want a hearty, plant-based meal.

Ingredients:

16 oz. pasta
1 can (15 oz.) diced tomatoes un-drained
1 large sweet onion, cut in julienne strips
4 garlic cloves, sliced or pressed
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
2 teaspoons dried oregano leaves
2 teaspoons basil
4 1/2 cups vegetable broth
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil



Directions:

Place pasta, tomatoes, onion, and garlic in a large stock pot. Pour in vegetable broth. Sprinkle on top the red pepper flakes, oregano, and basil. Drizzle oil over the top.

Cover the pot and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer while covered for about 10 minutes, stirring regularly. Cook until almost all the liquid has evaporated.

Season to taste with salt and pepper stirring several times to distribute the liquid from the bottom of the pot.




Often times, less is more


Most acupuncture points have multiple treatment properties. This means that a point in your shoulder (LI-15 Jian Yu) can treat the pain in your shoulder, but it can also treat pain in your wrist, symptoms from arthritis pain, or treat Tuberculosis of the lymph nodes. A point like Spleen-6 (San Yin Jiao) is great at treating a plethora of symptoms and more importantly it can often fix the root cause that is producing the symptoms in the first place. It is points like Spleen-6, among others, that can be utilized to develop a treatment that will use fewer needles but still get the same great results. Not every practitioner has the same philosophy as me, that less equals more, but if I can put fewer needles in a patient and still see an improvement in their condition, then I feel like it is a winning situation for everyone.

Monday, September 9, 2013

My Beef with Meat...A Review

A Review of My Beef with Meat, the Healthiest Argument for Eating a Plant-Strong Diet 
written by Rip Esselstyn

The plant-based lifestyle (vegan diet) is an increasingly popular diet that has many supporters and many more protesters. Protesters have a laundry list of arguments against a plant-based diet. In this review, I will present many facts to support arguments that favor a plant-based diet especially for its health inducing properties if the diet is followed correctly (I will not support eating French fries and potato chips as a plant-based diet, although it is plant-based). I will use the same presentation format for this review as the book, My Beef with Meat, the Healthiest Argument for Eating a Plant Strong Diet.

Argument #1
Eating a plant-based diet makes you sick and look sickly!
Many plant-based diet protesters will use this argument because some people who have been vegan for several years might get sick often and/or look “sickly.” This is usually due to ignorance about how and what they are supposed to eat. The vegan diet is often tied closely to the “raw food vegan diet,” which is where one would eat all of their food raw or cooked no more than 110˚F. I have learned from Chinese Medicine that eating mostly (if not all) raw food in ones diet can wreak havoc on the digestive system and ultimately making that person susceptible to disease. A plant-based diet, when eaten and prepared correctly, can be the healthiest thing for someone to do. Studies have shown that a plant-based diet not only stops further advancement of coronary heart disease, but it can reverse damage that has previously occurred. 

Argument #2
Vegans don't get enough protein. Plants aren't "complete" proteins
When we breathe air, we don't generally worry about getting enough oxygen, as long as we continue breathing normally, although only 21% of the air we breathe is composed of oxygen. The rest of the air is mostly nitrogen and a few other gases. This is a good analogy for protein. As long as one is eating enough calories each day, that person will get enough protein, even if they are only eating plants. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that each person gets (0.8)x(your ideal body weight in kilograms) = daily protein in grams. For a 175lb person, that would be 64 grams of protein per day...easy. On average, twenty-five percent of the calories from plants comes from protein. Green, leafy vegetables have as much as 50%! Even fruit has between 5% and 15% of calories coming from protein. Even a fruititarian could get enough daily protein as long as they were eating the proper amount of calories. The only way to not get 
enough protein in ones diet is to 1) not get enough calories in the first place or 2) eat a high fat, high sugar diet, which doesn't have enough necessary nutrients.

In 1971 a book called Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappé started the whole "complete" protein craze, which also led to the "protein combining" myth that plant eaters have to use a complicated method to combine certain plants to gain all of the essential amino acids to create complete proteins. Ten years later, Lappé rescinded the "protein combining" statement in an anniversary edition of her book, but by that point, the damage was done. Complete proteins can be found in foods such as meat, eggs, dairy, fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts and seeds. Meat and eggs don't need to be eaten to obtain these essential amino acids just to get enough protein. Protein combining can still be used to get what our bodies need.

Argument #3
You can't get enough Vitamin B12 on a plant-based diet
Vitamin B12 doesn't actually come from animals or plants. B12 is found in the soil that plants grow in and then the animals eat the plants (plus a little dirt) and incorporate that B12 into their systems. Technically, plant eaters can get B12 from eating a little dirt, but most people don't want to do that. The best way for vegans to get B12 is to take a B12 supplement or eat fortified whole-grain cereals, plant-based milks or nutritional yeast. Most humans have a B12 store in their liver that will provide them enough B12 for 3 to 5 years. The recommended daily allowance for B12 is 2.4 micrograms per day. Any plant eater can easily get that at breakfast alone.

Argument #4
Vegans will become iron deficient
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in the world regardless of diet. Studies have been done to compare iron levels in vegetarians, vegans, and meat eaters and the results prove that iron deficiency can happen to anyone. There are two types of iron, heme and non-heme. The heme iron only comes from meat where the animal once had red blood cells. Non-heme iron comes from plants. Heme iron is absorbed at a slightly higher rate than non-heme iron, but adding vitamin C to ones diet can help absorb iron at a 30% faster rate. Foods like dairy and the oxalates in some leafy greens can slow absorption rates. The CDC recommends that a male between the ages of 19 and 50 on a plant-based diet get about 14mg per day of non-heme iron. This is a snap if he is eating beans, spinach, soy and many other plant-based foods. Women need more daily iron than men due to a loss of iron monthly during their menses. It is always good to check with a nutritionist to determine how much iron one needs since excess iron in the body can lead to free radicals and disease. Cooking with an iron skillet will also provide some extra iron to any food, whether it contains iron or not. 

Argument #5
Our bones need calcium and you can't get enough calcium without milk
Calcium does not come from cows! Calcium is a mineral that is found in the soil and absorbed by plants. How do cows get calcium? They eat plants and absorb the calcium too. So why can't humans eat plants and absorb it just the same? We can! The logic should be that the countries with the highest consumption of milk (if milk is really where we get calcium) should have the lowest instance of osteoporosis and other bone diseases. This is not the case, however. Studies have shown that the countries with the highest consumption of milk and dairy products actually have the worst bone density and most bone diseases. This is due to the fact that dairy products and animal proteins are very acidic and leach the calcium from our bones to try to neutralize the acidity with the highly alkaline mineral, calcium. Calcium is found in dark, leafy greens, collards, and baked beans. 

Argument #6
If one is craving meat, they must need meat
Humans tend to crave things whether or not we need them. Addicts crave their drug of choice, but no doctor will tell the addict to keep taking drugs because their craving must mean they need it. The same goes for meat, dairy and eggs. People eating the standard american diet (ironically the acronym is SAD) will undoubtedly get cravings for meat for a short time after they first give it up. The good news is, these cravings go away very soon.

Argument #7
Eating a Plant-based diet is so hard to follow
Eating a plant-based diet is actually very easy once you know which foods are nutrient packed super foods and have a few recipes to follow. Recipes are very easy to find, just Google, "vegan recipes" or something specific like, "vegan carrot cake" and you'll have a long list of things to choose from. There are a significant amount of great vegan cookbooks as well for around $15 each. Shopping for vegan food is a snap. All grocery stores carry plenty of plants in the produce section. Making a shopping list before you get to the store is great and it should include five sections: whole grains, vegetables, fruits, legumes, spices. Once you get to the store, head straight for the produce section to find most of your staple items. Avoid specialty products since they usually contain large amounts of sugar, sodium, and processed ingredients. Buy dry beans and grains in bulk to keep on hand. For quick cooking, buy canned beans and frozen vegetables. Purchase only what you need for the next few days to reduce spoilage. Eating out can be easy for vegans too. Many restaurants now have vegan options and you can always ask your server to talk with the chef about making something vegan specially for you. 

Argument #8
A plant-based diet is more expensive than eating meat
This argument is entirely untrue. There have been a couple of studies that show a plant-based diet as more expensive, but those studies are using a calorie per dollar comparison. Eating a Snickers bar will give you more calories for less money than eating a banana. However, how many doctors or nutritionists will recommend eating a bunch or Snickers bars over a bunch of bananas? Very few doctors, I'm sure. The following are a few inexpensive power house foods to keep in your pantry at all times. Beans, for a long time have been referred to as the "poor man's food." I think beans are the "smart man's food." Beans are nutrient packed super foods for a very inexpensive price. Oats are cheap and packed with fiber and complex carbohydrates. Bananas are one of the greatest snack foods and they are cheap and packed with potassium and fiber. Potatoes are filling, plus they are packed with vitamins and potassium, not to mention they hardly cost a thing. Brown rice is great source of complex carbohydrates to keep your stomach full as well as your wallet. 

Argument #9
Everything in moderation is healthy
Not everything is good in moderation. You would be hard pressed to find a doctor that would recommend a moderate amount of cocaine or heroin. When eating meat, eggs and dairy have been shown to increase bad cholesterol, decrease good cholesterol, and increase vascular inflammation increasing ones risk of heart disease, eating these foods in moderation won't be beneficial either.

There are even more benefits to a plant-based diet that skeptics can't argue with. A plant-based diet is more eco-friendly than a diet high in meat, eggs and dairy. All the animals raised for human consumption require more space, energy and water than plants. Large factory farms that raise animals for widespread human consumption require millions of gallons of fossil fuels to transport the animals and products to stores and eventually the dinner table. If all the meats are averaged, it takes about 25 calories of fossil fuels to produce one calorie of animal protein in the US. On the contrary, it takes about 2.2 calories of fossil fuels to produce one calorie of plant protein.

Eating a plant based diet can help a person steer clear of unhealthy contaminants such as pesticides, heavy metals and antibiotics. Other toxic chemicals found in meat, eggs and dairy look like they came out of a meth lab: arsenic, lead, ammonia, copper, penicillin, nitrites and ivermectin. The FDA estimates that meat contains between 500 and 600 unnatural chemicals that they cannot even begin to track because of how vast 
the pollution is. 

It has been proven that the microscopic "bugs" that live in our gut are very beneficial to our bodies and digestion. Unfortunately for meat eaters, the carnitine that comes from meat is consumed by the "bugs" at which point they belch out a gas called trimethylamine (TMA). Then, the TMA is transported to the liver and changed into a chemical called trimethylamine n-oxide (TMAO). A recent study by the Cleveland Clinic revealed that high levels of TMAO can be a stronger indicator or heart disease than hypertension, smoking and high cholesterol. TMAO changes how cholesterol is managed and makes it easier for cholesterol to attach to the vasculature as well as makes it more difficult for the liver and intestines to rid the body of unnecessary cholesterol. Plant eaters actually have different "gut bugs" and those "bugs" don't produce TMA even if a vegetarian or vegan eats a steak. It takes time for the "gut bugs" to change and develop into TMA producing microbes. 

Ultimately, a plant-based diet with all the proper nutrients is the best defense we have against preventing and possibly reversing heart disease, stroke and cancer. Eating plants prevents inflammation in the body and vasculature, decreases bad cholesterol, increases good cholesterol, helps rid the body of harmful free radicals and keeps the body's mechanisms working in perfect harmony.

References:
Esselstyn, Rip. My Beef with Meat, the Healthiest Argument for Eating a Plant-Strong 
Diet. New York: Grand Central Life & Style, 2013.

Freedman, Rory, and Kim Barnouin. Skinny Bitch. Pennsylvania: Running Press Book 
Publishers, 2005.

Lear, Jane. "Jane Says: Stop Trying to Eat More Protein."